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Papandreou spoke to the Greek Parliament and talked about how Greece has a duty to highlight the responsibility of the citizen. "The citizen is the source of strength and our very existence. We trust the citizens."

A fitting speech from Athens. After all, the city is the birthplace of western Democracy.

This was the latest chapter in the Greek debt crisis that's been playing out for a year-and-a-half now. But yesterday's call for a referendum vote was much more than just another bump in the road. If voters say no, they're essentially saying, we don't like the conditions you've placed on us and we won't pay back our loans.

"It's a big deal because if Greece goes into default that will have repercussions all across Europe," said Bhaskar Chakravorti, senior associate dean for international business at the Fletcher School at Tufts University. "That could bring Europe to recession. And then, by transference, that would take the United States potentially back into a recessionary environment."

That's problem number one.

"Problem number two is many of the US banks have financial interconnections with the banking system in Europe," said Chakravorti. "And if a deal isn't struck in Europe, then that will have an impact on the US financial services industry."

Matthew Slaughter, associate dean at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, put the call for a referendum in starker terms

"The news from Greece raises the possibility it will somehow lead to an event like the fall of 2008 with the Lehman (Brothers) bankruptcy and the dramatic world financial crisis."

Nobody wants that. And that's why many European leaders reacted with anger today over the Greek prime minister's call for a January referendum on the latest bailout package. They say the Greeks got the best deal they're going to get and Greek leaders are now abdicating responsibility.

"Many people in the eurozone countries do not want Greece in the Euro, they think that Greece probably cannot be saved," said Charles Grant with the Centre for European Reform.
As for how the Greeks see things, Grant says the call for a referendum is about much more than just a bailout and the conditions that accompany it.

"If they vote no to this austerity package and they vote no to Papandreou, then they are really saying that they don't want to stay in the EU on current terms, in the Euro on current terms."

On Sunday, a Greek newspaper poll suggested that a majority of Greeks viewed the bailout deal negatively. At the same time, Greeks generally favor staying in the eurozone.

All this discussion might be moot by the end of the week. Greek lawmakers today called for a vote of no-confidence against Prime Minister Papandreou. If his government falls, it would likely cancel his referendum idea too. It could also delay any European debt deal, if not kill it entirely.

So what happens then?

"We are in completely uncharted waters now," said economist Yanis Varoufakis at the University of Athens. "The Greek social economy is imploding. The political system, as a whole, lacks legitimacy with the Greek people."

If Greece does default on its loans, it would have severe repercussions for the world's financial system. But it would hurt the Greeks a lot more than the rest of us. Matthew Slaughter at Dartmouth said if Greece defaults, say goodbye to future loans.

"History shows that when countries choose to default on their debt obligations to the rest of the world, they typically, for many years, sometimes decades, cannot regain access to international credit markets."

European leaders are still scrambling to find a solution. German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Nicolas Sarkozy are calling for emergency talks tomorrow in France.

Whichever way you turn, it's a time of great uncertainty.

"A lot of people say, 'Well, uncertainty is good because that's how investors make money,'" said Bhaskar Chakravorti at Tufts. "But this is not the kind of uncertainty that is good for anybody."

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